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The Interface of Scholar and Subject: Change in South Slav/American Dance

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 July 2014

Extract

As a South Slav/American and a dance ethnologist, my work focuses on change in dance/dancing as it relates to cultural change. The project herein refered to is best described as a comparative study of change over three generations (approximately 1900 to the present). The subjects are South Slav communities in California and communities in Yugoslavia which are regional sources of first generation immigrants in California. During this study I became aware of being both an insider and outsider, however, at the outset of this long term project (begun in 1974), I was neither aware nor concerned about the difference my cultural status would make to the group, to the research, or to myself.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Congress on Research in Dance 1981

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References

NOTES

* South Slav is a collective and artificial term identifying Slavic speaking people from present day Yugoslavia and Bulgaria in Southeast Europe. This project focuses upon the largest number of California South Slavic immigrants and their descendents who happen to come from an identifiable region along the southern Adriatic coast of Yugolsavia. This is not a homogeneous population either in Yugoslavia or in California.